TY - JOUR
T1 - The new HCN-expatriate context: a multi-source, multi-method investigation of American HCN support for BRICS expatriates
AU - Varma, Arup
AU - Hu, Biyun
AU - Wang, Chun Hsiao
AU - Budhwar, Pawan
AU - Pereira, Vijay
PY - 2024/8/26
Y1 - 2024/8/26
N2 - With the increasing internationalization of emerging market multinational corporations (EMNCs) especially from the BRICS counties (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South-Africa), the interactions between expatriates from these countries and the ‘new’ host country nationals (i.e. the U.S. American HCNs) is becoming a common organizational phenomenon. To better understand these interactions, in this study, we used two unique sources of data to examine the impact of HCNs willingness to offer support to expatriates. In Study 1, we used scenario-based experimental design with 571 HCNs from the US and examined their willingness to offer support to expatriates from the BRICS countries. In Study 2, 499 expatriates from the BRICS countries working in the US shared their actual experience with HCNs. Results from the two studies confirmed that expatriate humility was strongly associated with HCNs’ willingness to offer social-emotional and instrumental support to expatriates. More specifically, we found that perceived trustworthiness and values similarity acted as the mediating mechanisms. Type of job (financial industry versus educational sector) had no impact on HCNs willingness to offer support, while expatriate country of origin was likely to impact HCN support in the experiment but was shown to have no impact in the actual expatriate experience. We discuss theoretical and practical implications and suggest future research directions.
AB - With the increasing internationalization of emerging market multinational corporations (EMNCs) especially from the BRICS counties (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South-Africa), the interactions between expatriates from these countries and the ‘new’ host country nationals (i.e. the U.S. American HCNs) is becoming a common organizational phenomenon. To better understand these interactions, in this study, we used two unique sources of data to examine the impact of HCNs willingness to offer support to expatriates. In Study 1, we used scenario-based experimental design with 571 HCNs from the US and examined their willingness to offer support to expatriates from the BRICS countries. In Study 2, 499 expatriates from the BRICS countries working in the US shared their actual experience with HCNs. Results from the two studies confirmed that expatriate humility was strongly associated with HCNs’ willingness to offer social-emotional and instrumental support to expatriates. More specifically, we found that perceived trustworthiness and values similarity acted as the mediating mechanisms. Type of job (financial industry versus educational sector) had no impact on HCNs willingness to offer support, while expatriate country of origin was likely to impact HCN support in the experiment but was shown to have no impact in the actual expatriate experience. We discuss theoretical and practical implications and suggest future research directions.
KW - BRICS countries
KW - Host country nationals
KW - emerging market multinational corporations
KW - expatriates
KW - humility
UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09585192.2024.2389870
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85202489404&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/09585192.2024.2389870
DO - 10.1080/09585192.2024.2389870
M3 - Article
SN - 0958-5192
JO - International Journal of Human Resource Management
JF - International Journal of Human Resource Management
ER -